Rámáyan of Válmíki (World's Classics Series). Valmiki

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      Sped by wild paths away.

      They fled and left him there alone

      By longing love possessed;

      And with a heart no more his own

      He roamed about distressed.

      The aged saint came home, to find

      The hermit boy distraught,

      Revolving in his troubled mind

      One solitary thought.

      “Why dost thou not, my son,” he cried,

      “Thy due obeisance pay?

      Why do I see thee in the tide

      Of whelming thought to-day?

      A devotee should never wear

      A mien so sad and strange.

      Come, quickly, dearest child, declare

      The reason of the change.”

      And Rishyaśring, when questioned thus,

      Made answer in this wise:

      “O sire, there came to visit us

      Some men with lovely eyes.

      About my neck soft arms they wound

      And kept me tightly held

      To tender breasts so soft and round,

      That strangely heaved and swelled.

      They sing more sweetly as they dance

      Than e’er I heard till now,

      And play with many a sidelong glance

      And arching of the brow.”

      “My son,” said he, “thus giants roam

      Where holy hermits are,

      And wander round their peaceful home

      Their rites austere to mar.

      I charge thee, thou must never lay

      Thy trust in them, dear boy:

      They seek thee only to betray,

      And woo but to destroy.”

      Thus having warned him of his foes

      That night at home he spent.

      And when the morrow’s sun arose

      Forth to the forest went.

      But Rishyaśring with eager pace

      Sped forth and hurried to the place

      Where he those visitants had seen

      Of daintly waist and charming mien.

      When from afar they saw the son

      Of Saint Vibháṇdak toward them run,

      To meet the hermit boy they hied,

      And hailed him with a smile, and cried:

      “O come, we pray, dear lord, behold

      Our lovely home of which we told

      Due honour there to thee we’ll pay,

      And speed thee on thy homeward way.”

      Pleased with the gracious words they said

      He followed where the damsels led.

      As with his guides his steps he bent,

      That Bráhman high of worth,

      A flood of rain from heaven was sent

      That gladdened all the earth.

      Vibháṇdak took his homeward road,

      And wearied by the heavy load

      Of roots and woodland fruit he bore

      Entered at last his cottage door.

      Fain for his son he looked around,

      But desolate the cell he found.

      He stayed not then to bathe his feet,

      Though fainting with the toil and heat,

      But hurried forth and roamed about

      Calling the boy with cry and shout,

      He searched the wood, but all in vain;

      Nor tidings of his son could gain.

      One day beyond the forest’s bound

      The wandering saint a village found,

      And asked the swains and neatherds there

      Who owned the land so rich and fair,

      With all the hamlets of the plain,

      And herds of kine and fields of grain.

      They listened to the hermit’s words,

      And all the guardians of the herds,

      With suppliant hands together pressed,

      This answer to the saint addressed:

      “The Angas’ lord who bears the name

      Of Lomapád, renowned by fame,

      Bestowed these hamlets with their kine

      And all their riches, as a sign

      Of grace, on Rishyaśring: and he

      Vibháṇdak’s son is said to be.”

      The hermit with exulting breast

      The mighty will of fate confessed,

      By meditation’s eye discerned;

      And cheerful to his home returned.

      A stately ship, at early morn,

      The hermit’s son away had borne.

      Loud roared the clouds, as on he sped,

      The sky grew blacker overhead;

      Till, as he reached the royal town,

      A mighty flood of rain came down.

      By the great rain the monarch’s mind

      The coming of his guest divined.

      To meet the honoured youth he went,

      And low to earth his head he bent.

      With his own priest to lead the train,

      He gave the gift high guests obtain.

      And sought, with all who dwelt within

      The city walls, his grace to win.

      He fed him with the daintiest fare,

      He served him with unceasing care,

      And ministered with anxious eyes

      Lest anger in his breast should rise;

      And gave to be the Bráhman’s bride

      His own fair daughter, lotus-eyed.

      Thus loved and honoured by the king,

      The glorious Bráhman Rishyaśring

      Passed in that royal town his life

      With Śántá his beloved wife.”

      Canto 10. Rishyasring Invited.

      “Again,


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